Measuring finance for the economy and finance for finance

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Abstract

Marcello Spanò proposes an analysis of the composition of the yearly changes that occurred in sectorial balance sheets in fourteen founder countries of the European Union, from 1995 to 2015. He proposes a methodology based on stock-flow consistent accounting to analyse how superfluous financial flows grow and how they are allocated between sectors with different functions (purchasing power creators vs. users) and between different activities (real production vs. wealth appropriation), while also examining the impact of market revaluations on sectorial balance sheets. He reaches three important conclusions. First, an increasing amount of credit creation has not been allocated to the generation of real income; second, a prevalent and growing share of the excess finance has circulated within the domestic and foreign financial sector only. Third, financial asset revaluations, which are of the same order of magnitude as private sector transaction flows, have a high incidence on the sectorial net financial position.

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Spanò, M. (2019). Measuring finance for the economy and finance for finance. In Finance, Growth and Inequality: Post-Keynesian Perspectives (pp. 12–35). Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781788973694.00008

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